[This is the headline over a report by Lucy Adams published this evening on the HeraldScotland website. It reads as follows:]
Legal experts have warned that the
Bill currently going through Holyrood to allow for the release of a
secret document about the Lockerbie case is a waste of time and
taxpayers’ money.
The
unpublished 800-page report from the Scottish Criminal Cases Review
Commission (SCCRC) explains the six reasons why the man convicted of the
Lockerbie bombing should be referred back to court for a fresh appeal.
Ministers
pushed for the new Bill and have said consistently they want to see the
document put in the public domain, but the reality is that it requires
an exemption under the Data Protection Act, which can only be granted by
Justice Secretary Ken Clarke.
Despite
starting the process to allow the SCCRC to publish in 2009, the Scottish
Government has still not officially asked Mr Clarke for the exemption.
The issue has been raised in informal talks only.
Gerard
Sinclair, the Commission’s chief executive, said: “As I previously
indicated the Commission is willing, in principle, to publish this
document, the content of which has been the subject of a great deal of
public and media speculation and debate.
“I
believe, however, that legislation passed by the Scottish Parliament
cannot, by itself, guarantee publication of this document, as both the
Scottish Parliament and the Commission must act at all times in
compliance with their respective obligations under the Human Rights Act.
“In addition, the Commission would
also still require to act lawfully and comply with the requirement of
the Data Protection Act 1998 which is of course UK-wide legislation.”
Scottish officials claim the Bill currently going through the Justice
Committee is important because it will remove the current obstacle of
where a party objects to publication.
Robert
Black QC said: “They did not have to do it this way. It looks like they
either had bad legal advice or they knew perfectly well what the end
result would be. Why they would want to waste the Scottish Parliament’s
time with this is an interesting question.”
A spokeswoman for the Ministry of Justice said it had received no official request from ministers.
A Scottish Government spokeswoman said: “It is precisely because we
believe that the SCCRC Statement of Reasons should be in the public
domain that we are introducing a Bill later this year to enable
publication, and the Bill is necessary in order to overcome objections
by interested parties preventing any publication.”
......unless of course there might be political mileage in having English legal authorities publicily obstructing an attempt by the Scottish government to make public information on the biggest mass murder ever in Scotland in the build up to a referendum on independence.....
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